Melissa trailed her running group as their finish point, a poplar tree, came into view. Her Saturday run with the girls was her decompression time. Not today. She’d struggled to find her rhythm and to keep up. For this, she blamed her new boss.
Throughout the run, the clash between her colleagues and their toxic supervisor had pulled her focus. If Melissa didn’t find a solution, soon, her team would walk. She couldn’t walk with them. Her mother’s nursing home bills made Melissa’s resigning an impossibility.
“Still lost at work?” Tobie, forever youthful at 68, took a spot beside her and began cool down stretches. “You’ll sort it. New managers need time to settle down.”
“No, they don’t,” said Latisha as she joined them.
“H.R. needs to give your boss the boot before everyone quits and you’re left with the workload of seven people.” She rubbed Melissa’s arm. “Let’s throw some cappuccino at the problem.”
“Another time,” said Melissa. “I’m going to do the route again, see if it clears my head.”
“You want some company?” Latisha’s comfort-ing hand moved to her shoulder.
“No, you get on with your day.” Melissa gave them a confident smile to hide the churning in her stomach.
“Be strong,” said Tobie, “we’ll be with you in spirit.”
Melissa jogged away, head down, lost in thought. When she looked up, a man was heading in her direction. Tall, headphones, brand new running gear that screamed “be impressed with me.”
She ignored his smile.
He muttered something, but she was past him. A few strides and instinct made her glance back. He stood in the path, glaring at her.
They made eye contact.
He jogged toward her.
Stay calm, she told herself, turning away.
Melissa groped for her phone, realizing too late that she’d left it at home. Stay calm. There was a parking lot a mile ahead. People would be there. She ran on, kept her gaze angled to watch for his shadow, her ears alert for the sound of his breathing.
Too soon, the dark smear of his looming presence came into view. Melissa sped up.